Copyright (c) 2011, Joe Prince, Admix Designs (http://www.admixdesigns.com/) with Reserved Font Name Varela.- This Font Software is licensed under the SIL Open Font License, Version 1.1.- This license is available with a FAQ at: http://scripts.sil.org/OFL

ITC is a trademark of International Typeface Corporation Registered in U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and may be registered in certain other jurisdictions; Weber Hand is a trademark of International Typeface Corporation and may be registe

NOTIFICATION OF LICENSE AGREEMENTYou have obtained this font software either directly from Monotype Imaging Inc., its affiliates or its licensees.You acknowledge that the font software is protected by the copyright and other intellectual property law of the United States and its various States, by the copyright and design laws of other nations, and by international treaties. Your use of this font software is limited to the rights license rights granted to you in the Monotype Imaging End User License Agreement (EULA) agreed to by you at the time of purchase and you should retain a copy of such EULA for your future reference. You may not use, rent, lease, sublicense, give, lend, or distribute the font software, or any copy thereof, except as expressly provided by the EULA.The current Monotype Imaging End User License Agreement can be viewed at http://www.fonts.com/legal/mi-eula.htm.

Trebuchet, designed by Vincent Connare in 1996, is a humanist sans serif designed for easy screen readability. Trebuchet takes its inspiration from the sans serifs of the 1930s which had large x heights and round features intended to promote readability on signs. The typeface name is credited to a puzzle heard at Microsoft, where the question was asked, could you build a Trebuchet (a form of medieval catapult) to launch a person from the main campus to the consumer campus, and how? The Trebuchet fonts are intended to be the vehicle that fires your messages across the Internet. Launch your message with a Trebuchet page.